in the wake of the Franklin Fire just
a couple days from his ninety-ninth
birthday. I imagine him composed,
still able to sidestep that pesky
ill-placed ottoman on his way out
the door even in old age. Only
instead of his house, the apartment
in New Rochelle, that stylish “wedge” couch,
everything mid-century modern.
And it is Mary Tyler Moore, not
his wife braced by his side. The whole scene
is black and white, a little grainy,
the contrast just a little too sharp
for grasping any of it. He posts
online that the evacuation
went smoothly except for his pet cat,
Bobo, who escaped. Then I recall
how someone once said (I don’t know who)
Life’s a tragedy for those who feel,
a comedy for those who think, which
makes me chuckle, begin to muse that
with the right ensemble cast, a few
well-timed puns, and a happy ending,
the search for the feline possibly
could make a good sitcom episode.
For now, we have a cliffhanger though—
chaos and smoke, a brain the size of
a human pinky, its owners gone,
how the loneliness of an orange
tabby cat maybe sheltered within
a culvert or some other dark out-
of-the-way place catches in our throats
like dust, as bushes and weeds ignite
in our minds, that red wall of heat now
pushing against the backs of our eyes.
Dick Van Dyke flees his Malibu home

Robert Fillman is the author of The Melting Point (Broadstone Books, 2025), House Bird (Terrapin Books, 2022), and the chapbook, November Weather Spell (Main Street Rag, 2019). Individual poems have appeared in Salamander, Spoon River Poetry Review, Tar River Poetry, and Verse Daily. He has received prizes from Sheila-Na-Gig online, Third Wednesday, and The Twin Bill for select poems. Fillman teaches at Kutztown University in eastern Pennsylvania and is the poetry editor at Pennsylvania English.